AG urges Knesset to strip phone-smuggling MK’s immunity

Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit sends an urgent appeal to Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein seeking to strip Joint (Arab) List MK Basel Ghattas of his parliamentary immunity after the lawmaker came under suspicion of passing contraband to Palestinian inmates in Israeli prison.

In light of the request, the House Committee is to vote later today on Ghattas’s immunity in a bid to advance the criminal proceedings against him. If the committee decides in favor of removing his immunity the matter will move to the Knesset itself, where Ghattas’s fellow lawmakers will have the final say.

Parliament doesn’t usually convene on Thursday so a special plenum session would be called, during which Ghattas would be given an opportunity to plead his case.

The development comes the day after Ghattas was questioned by the national serious crimes unit of the Israel Police over allegations he handed miniature cellphones and secret notes to two imprisoned Palestinians, one of whom is serving a 37-year sentence for murder, during a visit at Ketziot Prison south of Beersheba on Sunday.

Knesset members cannot be indicted so long as they enjoy parliamentary immunity.

In a letter to committee head MK Yoav Kisch (Likud), Ghattas claims the rushed process in organizing the meeting, and the manner in which the police and law enforcement authorities have handled the case thus far, has been unfair to him.

“In light of my knowledge that the debate that will be held today is nothing but than a political discussion whose outcome is a foregone conclusion, I am informing you that I will not attend the meeting,” he writes.

Israeli military official says low chances of war in 2017

A senior Israeli military officer says the army believes the Middle East’s chaos has weakened the country’s enemies, creating a low probability of war involving Israel in 2017.

The official says the army concluded that neither Hezbollah in Lebanon nor Hamas in the Gaza Strip is interested in sparking a new conflict.

The official speaks on condition of anonymity according to military protocol. He is sharing an official year-end intelligence assessment.

He says Hezbollah is mired in the Syrian civil war while Hamas has lost much of its support from the outside. Still, the official cautions that an unexpected “dynamic of escalation” could always risk sparking a new conflict.

Joint List says Ghattas hearing is ‘incitement’

In a statement announcing that it is boycotting the Knesset committee session on stripping MK Basel Ghattas’s immunity, his Joint List faction says the debate is “incitement” and its results are a foregone conclusion.

“We decided not to participate in the Knesset meeting about the immunity of Basel Ghattas, as it is an inciting and grandstanding meeting, a field tribunal, whose results are known in advance,” the faction says.

Police to heighten alertness during Hanukkah

The Israel Police will be deploying thousands of additional officers across the country ahead of the upcoming Hanukkah festival, with emphasis on malls and shopping centers, concerts and other crowded places, the spokesperson’s office says.

Police will be on a raised level of alert throughout the eight days, and will also intensify their crackdown on Palestinians entering Israel illegally and those who transport, house and employ them.

Iran the main source of Mideast terrorism — military official

An Israeli military official says Iran remains the main “source of terrorism” in the Middle East but it too has suffered in Syria, with more than 1,000 casualties.

He says that Iran’s entanglement in the Syrian war alongside Assad’s forces has led it to scale back in supporting Hamas.

The Palestinian terror group has seen its backing plummet from everywhere except Qatar, a staunch supporter of Gaza’s rulers.

The military officer also says that Israel has noticed a resulting shift in Hamas’ behavior, with the group making a real effort to stop rocket fire from the Gaza Strip toward Israel.

As for the Islamic State group, which has lost much territory in Iraq and Syria in the face of a US-led coalition campaign and an Iraqi government offensive to free the city of Mosul, the officer says it’s in retreat but that there are no signs of its imminent collapse.

Moscow doubts killer of ambassador was a lone wolf

The spokesman for President Vladimir Putin indicates Moscow doesn’t believe the gunman who killed Russia’s ambassador to Turkey acted on his own, but refuses to explain the reasons for the suspicion.

“We shouldn’t rush with any theories before the investigators establish who were behind the assassination of our ambassador,” says spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who offers no suggestions about who those people might be.

Katsav freed from prison

Police bust Palestinian minors with weapons

Police say a covert operation overnight Tuesday by the army and border police busted a group of seven Palestinian minors who were crafting improvised weapons in the West Bank village of Beit Fajjar, near Bethlehem.

Six weapons are confiscated by Israeli authorities.

The sting is one of several by Israeli security forces in an effort to crack down on the production of improvised guns by Palestinians.

Trump meeting security adviser after attacks abroad

President-elect Donald Trump is planning to meet with his incoming national security adviser in the aftermath of violence abroad as the process of filling top jobs in his administration presses on, marked by some infighting among advisers.

Trump’s meeting with retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, his choice for national security adviser, will come a day after Flynn and several other members of the incoming national security team met with Vice President-elect Mike Pence in Washington.

Aides say the meeting was planned before the acts of violence in Germany and Turkey, though they were discussed.

Police grill Islamic leader suspected of incitement

An alleged senior member of Israel’s Islamic Movement is interrogated by the Israel Police’s 433 serious crimes unit on suspicion of incitement to terrorism and violence, as well as supporting an illegal organization, according to police.

The movement’s northern branch was outlawed a year ago.

According to a police statement, “on various occasions, all of them after the movement was outlawed,” quotes attributed to the unnamed suspect were published on various media confirming his role in the group.

Police say some of the statements, as well as confirming the man’s role in the movement, constituted incitement.

School to resume after municipalities end day-long strike

Local municipalities agree to end their day-old strike, after reporting progress in negotiations with the Prime Minister’s Office and the Finance Ministry over planned budget cuts.

Though no agreement has been reached, the umbrella organization representing some 190 local governments says schools and municipal services will resume on Thursday to prevent further strain on the public.

The Center for Local Government says talks with government ministries will resume early next week.

High schools, kindergartens and municipal offices were shuttered in dozens of cities across the country today, demanding the millions of shekels cuts cut from the 2017 state budget be canceled.

In a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon Monday, the Center for Local Government had said the slashes would leave local authorities with a total reduction of NIS 250 million in critical state support.

Trump adviser says he’s ditching ‘drain the swamp’

One of Donald Trump’s advisers says the president-elect is no longer interested in his rallying cry “drain the swamp.”

“I’m told he now just disclaims that. He now says it was cute, but he doesn’t want to use it anymore,” former House Speaker Newt Gingrich says in an interview aired on NPR. Gingrich, a vice chairman of the transition team, also predicts there will be “constant fighting” over Trump’s efforts to reduce the influence of lobbyists and Washington insiders.

Trump’s aides say he remains committed to his underlying swamp-draining policies, such as banning outgoing Trump transition and administration members from lobbying for five years. Trump also prohibits any lobbyists from joining his transition team or administration unless they de-register.

“President-elect Trump’s ethics reform policies are full speed ahead,” transition spokesman Jason Miller says. “We’re going to change the way business is done in Washington and start putting the American people first.”

“‘Drain the swamp'” became a staple of the final month of Trump’s campaign, with crowds chanting it as loudly as they had been shouting “build the wall” and “lock her up.” The slogan also appeared on T-shirts and signs.

It has remained part of Trump’s post-election “thank you” tour. Whether in Ohio or Florida, the crowd continued to shout along with the president-elect as he vowed to curtail corruption in Washington — even as he revealed that he wasn’t always crazy about the catchphrase.

“Funny how that term caught on, isn’t it?” Trump mused during a rally this month in Des Moines, Iowa. “I tell everyone, I hated it. Somebody said ‘drain the swamp’ and I said, ‘Oh, that is so hokey. That is so terrible.'”

A shipyard that was contracted by Israel to build war ships is owned by the family of Lebanon’s defense minister at the time, Channel 2 news reports. The report expands on a Yedioth Ahronoth report from earlier this month that stated the shipyard’s connection to Lebanon and Abu Dhabi but did not name its real owners.

According to the Channel 2 report, Lebanese then-defense minister and deputy prime minister Samir Moqbel’s siblings and daughter hold a 94 percent stake in the shipyard, Abu Dhabi MAR. Moqbel was replaced in the position of defense minister last week, by Yacoub Sarraf.

Construction of the ships, commissioned to defend Israel’s offshore gas fields, was agreed in a 2015 deal between Israel and the German company ThyssenKrupp, which subcontracted the work to the shipyard. Under 2015 deal, worth €430 million (&dollar;480 million), ThyssenKrupp would supply Israel with four warships over a period of five years.

The Channel 2 report, which names Zionist Union MK Erel Margalit as its source, also states that three Israeli businessmen — two former senior naval officers and a prominent attorney, all unnamed — representing the defense establishment pressured the shipyard to change its name so as to cover up its links to Abu Dhabi and Lebanon.

Margalit, in a letter, urged Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit to open an investigation into the case, the report says.

“The fact that one of the owners of the company that’s building naval vessels for Israel is the defense minister of a country designated as an enemy state, and which, according to reports, cooperated with the Hezbollah organization and Iran, sets off a warning light,” he wrote.

Truck attack suspect had been under surveillance

German authorities say the suspect in Monday’s deadly truck attack in Berlin was under covert surveillance for several months this year.

Berlin prosecutors tell The Associated Press in a statement that they launched an investigation against Anis Amri on March 14 followed a tip from federal security agencies.

The tip warned that Amri, who was considered a potential threat by authorities in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, might be planning a break-in to finance the purchase of automatic weapons for use in an attack.

Surveillance showed that Amri was involved in drug dealing in a Berlin park and involved in a bar brawl, but no evidence to substantiate the original warning. The observation was called off in September.

Kremlin says almost all Russia-US dialogue ‘frozen’

The Kremlin says that nearly all the communication channels between Moscow and Washington were frozen.

“Practically all levels of dialogue with the United States are frozen,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov tells Mir TV, according to state news agency RIA Novosti. “We don’t communicate with one another. Or we do so minimally.”

Russia finds itself locked in its worst standoff with the West since the Cold War over its 2014 annexation of Crimea, the conflict in Ukraine and lingering disagreement about the conflict in Syria.

US State Department spokesman John Kirby assures later that “diplomatic engagement with Russia continues across a wide range of issues.”

“That we have significant differences with Moscow on some of these issues is well known, but there hasn’t been a break in dialogue,” Kirby says, adding that Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov had spoken on the phone about the situation in Syria Tuesday.

10 Turkish soldiers killed fighting IS in Syria

Turkey’s state television says 10 Turkish soldiers have killed in three separate suicide attacks in the northern town of al-Bab, which Turkish troops and Turkey-backed Syrian opposition fighters are trying to capture from the Islamic State group.

The report by TRT television came hours after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says IS was fighting “for dear life” in al-Bab, carrying out suicide bombings and attacks with improvised explosive devices.

Earlier today four soldiers were also reported killed in the battle for al-Bab.

A total of 35 Turkish soldiers have died in northern Syria since August, when Turkey sent ground troops to support Turkey-backed Syrian opposition forces in clearing a border area of IS militants and to curb Syrian Kurdish territorial expansion.

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